1 |
< |
XML via UDP - expected data from hosts |
2 |
< |
====================================== |
3 |
< |
|
4 |
< |
|
5 |
< |
<<< Provisional, pjm2@ukc.ac.uk >>> |
6 |
< |
|
7 |
< |
|
8 |
< |
Purpose of this document |
9 |
< |
------------------------ |
10 |
< |
|
11 |
< |
This document shall help to provide a separate party with |
12 |
< |
the knowledge required to use their own implementation of |
13 |
< |
a piece of host monitoring software. In particular, this |
14 |
< |
document details the data that is to be expected from a |
15 |
< |
host. This document is additional to |
16 |
< |
http://www.i-scream.org.uk/cgi-bin/docs.cgi?doc=specification/xml_via_udp.txt |
17 |
< |
|
18 |
< |
|
19 |
< |
Background |
20 |
< |
---------- |
21 |
< |
|
22 |
< |
Hosts are expected to periodically send UDP packets to the |
23 |
< |
central monitoring system. Such packets may contain various |
24 |
< |
pieces of information about the host, such as how much free |
25 |
< |
memory is remaining on the host, etc. Some of this data is |
26 |
< |
deemed to be 'essential', some is 'expected' and the rest |
27 |
< |
is not necessary, but shall not be ignored by the central |
28 |
< |
monitoring system server. |
29 |
< |
|
30 |
< |
|
31 |
< |
Specification |
32 |
< |
------------- |
33 |
< |
|
34 |
< |
The UDP packet must contain a complete and well-formed |
35 |
< |
piece of XML markup, describing the data that the host is |
36 |
< |
submitting. In the event of a piece of data containing |
37 |
< |
an invalid character, such as a "<", it is the responsibilty |
38 |
< |
of the host to format this in a valid manner, for example |
39 |
< |
by replacing all occurrences of "<" with "<" before it is |
40 |
< |
sent in a UDP packet to the central monitoring system server. |
41 |
< |
|
42 |
< |
Alternatively, the data may be wrapped up in special CDATA |
43 |
< |
tags. For example, if we wish to send the following text: |
44 |
< |
|
45 |
< |
<>&!" |
46 |
< |
|
47 |
< |
surrounded by <test_chars> tags then we can safely send this |
48 |
< |
by wrapping it up to produce the following XML snippet: |
49 |
< |
|
50 |
< |
<test_chars><![CDATA[<>&!"]]></test_chars> |
51 |
< |
|
52 |
< |
The bare minimum that a host should send is the following: - |
53 |
< |
|
54 |
< |
<packet> |
55 |
< |
</packet> |
56 |
< |
|
57 |
< |
Note that every XML tag must also have a matching closing |
58 |
< |
tag. |
59 |
< |
|
60 |
< |
However, such a packet is rather useless when it is |
61 |
< |
received by the server - it does not provide any useful |
62 |
< |
information. As such, a packet will be rejected by the |
63 |
< |
server if it does not specify the machine_name, its |
64 |
< |
I.P. address (ip), a packet sequence number (seq_no) |
65 |
< |
and a date. Note that the date is a long integer |
66 |
< |
representing the number of seconds since the epoch. |
67 |
< |
All of these are expected to be specified as an attribute |
68 |
< |
of the packet tag. If they are not specified here, then |
69 |
< |
the packet will be rejected. |
70 |
< |
|
71 |
< |
Thus, to ensure that a packet has a chance of being |
72 |
< |
acted upon, a host must specify at least four attribute |
73 |
< |
values - machine_name, ip, date and seq_no. These must |
74 |
< |
be formed in the style shown below. |
75 |
< |
|
76 |
< |
<packet machine_name="raptor" ip="aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd" |
77 |
< |
date="93456245245" seq_no="1234567"> |
78 |
< |
</packet> |
79 |
< |
|
80 |
< |
Note that the server may run additional 'plugin' tools |
81 |
< |
that are designed to filter/reject packets under certain |
82 |
< |
conditions. Please check with the server administrator |
83 |
< |
if you wish to know about the specific configuration of |
84 |
< |
your central monitoring system. |
85 |
< |
|
86 |
< |
The I.P. address and machine_name could be found from |
87 |
< |
the UDP packet itself, but these remain essential so |
88 |
< |
as to provide resiliance from stray packets that do not |
89 |
< |
contain any valid or useful data. |
90 |
< |
|
91 |
< |
Remember that malformed XML data would be rejected by the |
92 |
< |
central monitoring system immediately, without acting upon |
93 |
< |
it. |
94 |
< |
|
95 |
< |
|
96 |
< |
Classification of XML data in our system |
97 |
< |
---------------------------------------- |
98 |
< |
|
99 |
< |
|
100 |
< |
ESSENTIAL: - |
101 |
< |
|
102 |
< |
The following values are ESSENTIAL in each packet. Any |
103 |
< |
packet without these will be rejected. They MUST be |
104 |
< |
specified as attributes of the root node ("packet"): - |
105 |
< |
|
106 |
< |
ip |
107 |
< |
seq_no |
108 |
< |
date |
109 |
< |
machine_name |
110 |
< |
|
111 |
< |
|
112 |
< |
EXPECTED: - |
113 |
< |
|
114 |
< |
The following values are EXPECTED in each packet. All |
115 |
< |
packets are RECOMMENDED to specify these values, as the |
116 |
< |
server is designed to permanently store such data in an |
117 |
< |
easy and quick to access manner. It is not essential to |
118 |
< |
specify such values, but it does limit the usefulness of |
119 |
< |
the central monitoring system if these values are not |
120 |
< |
specified: - |
121 |
< |
|
122 |
< |
mac_address (attribute) |
123 |
< |
os_name (attribute) |
124 |
< |
os_version (attribute) |
125 |
< |
cpus * |
126 |
< |
load * |
127 |
< |
memory * |
128 |
< |
swap * |
129 |
< |
disk_free * |
130 |
< |
disk_total * |
131 |
< |
users (attribute) |
132 |
< |
|
133 |
< |
* - These parameters are specified with tags of the same |
134 |
< |
name. They contain nested XML tags. See later in |
135 |
< |
this document for more details about that! |
136 |
< |
|
137 |
< |
All of the values marked as being attributes above must be |
138 |
< |
specified as an attribute of the root tag ("packet") |
139 |
< |
|
140 |
< |
|
141 |
< |
OTHER: - |
142 |
< |
|
143 |
< |
Any other arbitrary values may be specified by the host. |
144 |
< |
The only provision here is that they may not share the |
145 |
< |
same name as another tag or attribute within the same |
146 |
< |
heirarchical level. The server will be able to handle |
147 |
< |
such clashes, however, it cannot be guaranteed which |
148 |
< |
of the duplicate parameters would gain priority. |
149 |
< |
|
150 |
< |
|
151 |
< |
Detail of a complete 'expected' XML packet via UDP |
152 |
< |
-------------------------------------------------- |
153 |
< |
|
154 |
< |
I shall start by showing an example of a complete |
155 |
< |
'expected' packet. I shall then explain the contents |
156 |
< |
of it. |
157 |
< |
|
158 |
< |
Here is an example of an XML packet, containing all of |
159 |
< |
the 'essential' and 'expected' data: - |
160 |
< |
|
161 |
< |
<packet ip="" seq_no="" date="" machine_name="" |
162 |
< |
mac_address="" os_name="" os_version="" |
163 |
< |
user=""> |
164 |
< |
<cpus> |
165 |
< |
<cpu1></cpu1> |
166 |
< |
<cpu2></cpu2> |
167 |
< |
<cpu3></cpu3> |
168 |
< |
</cpus> |
169 |
< |
<load> |
170 |
< |
<load1><load1> |
171 |
< |
<load5><load5> |
172 |
< |
<load10><load10> |
173 |
< |
</load> |
174 |
< |
<memory> |
175 |
< |
<free></free> |
176 |
< |
<total></total> |
177 |
< |
</memory> |
178 |
< |
<swap> |
179 |
< |
<free></free> |
180 |
< |
<total></total> |
181 |
< |
</swap> |
182 |
< |
<disk_free> |
183 |
< |
<p1></p1> |
184 |
< |
<p2></p2> |
185 |
< |
<p3></p3> |
186 |
< |
</disk_free> |
187 |
< |
<disk_total> |
188 |
< |
<p1></p1> |
189 |
< |
<p2></p2> |
190 |
< |
<p3></p3> |
191 |
< |
</disk_total> |
192 |
< |
</packet> |
193 |
< |
|
194 |
< |
Note that linefeeds and spaces would normally not be present. |
195 |
< |
These are only shown above for structure clarity. |
196 |
< |
|
197 |
< |
Note that all of the essential attributes have been specified |
198 |
< |
as attributes of the root node. The expected attribute |
199 |
< |
values are also attributes of the root node. |
200 |
< |
|
201 |
< |
The <cpus> tag begins a list of cpu load information. |
202 |
< |
Each subtag herein must be of the form cpux, where x is |
203 |
< |
the number of the processor in multiprocessor systems. |
204 |
< |
Note that this numbering starts from zero. |
205 |
< |
|
206 |
< |
The <load> tag begins a list of system load information. |
207 |
< |
The load tag is only expected to contain 3 subtags, named |
208 |
< |
"load1", "load5" and "load10". These represent the average |
209 |
< |
load 1 minutes ago, 5 minutes ago and 10 minutes ago |
210 |
< |
respectively. |
211 |
< |
|
212 |
< |
The <memory> tag begins a list of system memory information. |
213 |
< |
This tag is only expected to contain two subtags, as shown |
214 |
< |
in the example above. These two subtags specify how much |
215 |
< |
memory the system has free and how much memory the system |
216 |
< |
has in total. |
217 |
< |
|
218 |
< |
The <swap> tag is identical in nature to the <memory> tag. |
219 |
< |
|
220 |
< |
The <disk_free> tag begins a list of free disk space |
221 |
< |
information. Each subtag must be of the form px, where |
222 |
< |
x is the number of the disk partition that is unique for |
223 |
< |
that particular system. The value represents how much |
224 |
< |
space is free on that partition. Note that px numbering |
225 |
< |
starts from zero. |
226 |
< |
|
227 |
< |
The <disk_total> tag begins a list of total disk space, |
228 |
< |
similar in implementation to the <disk_free> tag. |
229 |
< |
|
230 |
< |
Any other values and attributes may be specified in the |
231 |
< |
packet, providing they are not specified in the same |
232 |
< |
heirarchical level as another attribute or value with |
233 |
< |
the same name. |
234 |
< |
|
235 |
< |
|
236 |
< |
Flexibility and Minimising bandwidth |
237 |
< |
------------------------------------ |
238 |
< |
|
239 |
< |
The following issues still stand: - |
240 |
< |
|
241 |
< |
The means of submitting host data via UDP containing XML |
242 |
< |
markup is provided so that future customisation is easily |
243 |
< |
possible. It would be possible to easily tailor a custom |
244 |
< |
piece of host monitoring software to provide exactly what |
245 |
< |
data is desired for adequate monitoring. |
246 |
< |
|
247 |
< |
Some of the XML markup demonstrated above contains a lot |
248 |
< |
of rendundant features. For example, it is not necessary |
249 |
< |
to lay the contents out neatly (although this certainly |
250 |
< |
helps visualise the contents). |
251 |
< |
|
252 |
< |
The amount of data sent within each UDP packet may be (in |
253 |
< |
some cases, vastly) reduced by using some of the ideas |
254 |
< |
described below: - |
255 |
< |
|
256 |
< |
- Remove unnecessary linefeeds and 'white space' |
257 |
< |
|
258 |
< |
- If a single piece of data is to be represented, it |
259 |
< |
will usually occupy less space if it is stored as |
260 |
< |
an attribute to a tag, rather than within a pair |
261 |
< |
of tags. |
262 |
< |
|
263 |
< |
- Comments within the XML may be useful for testing |
264 |
< |
purposes, however, the server ignores all comments |
265 |
< |
so these can be removed to reduce packet sizes. |
266 |
< |
|
267 |
< |
Taking the above into account, here is an example of some |
268 |
< |
ideally formed XML to be contained within a UDP packet: - |
269 |
< |
|
270 |
< |
<packet machine_name="raptor" ip="aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd" |
271 |
< |
><freespace><drive1>23677</drive1><drive2>23534</d |
272 |
< |
rive2><drive3>10390</drive3></freespace></packet> |
273 |
< |
|
274 |
< |
Notice how all unnecessary 'white space' and linefeeds have |
275 |
< |
been removed. The comment has also been removed. Values |
276 |
< |
such as "machine_name" and "ip" have both been stored as an |
277 |
< |
attribute of the root node ("packet") as this results in |
278 |
< |
a smaller packet size. |
279 |
< |
|
280 |
< |
|
281 |
< |
About |
282 |
< |
----- |
283 |
< |
|
284 |
< |
This document was written by Paul Mutton [pjm2@ukc.ac.uk] |
285 |
< |
for use by the team working on a 3rd year Computer Science |
286 |
< |
project called "i-scream". More details can be found on the |
287 |
< |
project website - http://www.i-scream.org.uk |
288 |
< |
|
289 |
< |
|
1 |
> |
XML via UDP - expected data from hosts |
2 |
> |
====================================== |
3 |
> |
|
4 |
> |
|
5 |
> |
<<< Provisional, pjm2@ukc.ac.uk >>> |
6 |
> |
|
7 |
> |
|
8 |
> |
Purpose of this document |
9 |
> |
------------------------ |
10 |
> |
|
11 |
> |
This document shall help to provide a separate party with |
12 |
> |
the knowledge required to use their own implementation of |
13 |
> |
a piece of host monitoring software. In particular, this |
14 |
> |
document details the data that is to be expected from a |
15 |
> |
host. This document is additional to |
16 |
> |
http://www.i-scream.org.uk/cgi-bin/docs.cgi?doc=specification/xml_via_udp.txt |
17 |
> |
|
18 |
> |
|
19 |
> |
Background |
20 |
> |
---------- |
21 |
> |
|
22 |
> |
Hosts are expected to periodically send UDP packets to the |
23 |
> |
central monitoring system. Such packets may contain various |
24 |
> |
pieces of information about the host, such as how much free |
25 |
> |
memory is remaining on the host, etc. Some of this data is |
26 |
> |
deemed to be 'essential', some is 'expected' and the rest |
27 |
> |
is not necessary, but shall not be ignored by the central |
28 |
> |
monitoring system server. |
29 |
> |
|
30 |
> |
|
31 |
> |
Specification |
32 |
> |
------------- |
33 |
> |
|
34 |
> |
The UDP packet must contain a complete and well-formed |
35 |
> |
piece of XML markup, describing the data that the host is |
36 |
> |
submitting. In the event of a piece of data containing |
37 |
> |
an invalid character, such as a "<", it is the responsibilty |
38 |
> |
of the host to format this in a valid manner, for example |
39 |
> |
by replacing all occurrences of "<" with "<" before it is |
40 |
> |
sent in a UDP packet to the central monitoring system server. |
41 |
> |
|
42 |
> |
Alternatively, the data may be wrapped up in special CDATA |
43 |
> |
tags. For example, if we wish to send the following text: |
44 |
> |
|
45 |
> |
<>&!" |
46 |
> |
|
47 |
> |
surrounded by <test_chars> tags then we can safely send this |
48 |
> |
by wrapping it up to produce the following XML snippet: |
49 |
> |
|
50 |
> |
<test_chars><![CDATA[<>&!"]]></test_chars> |
51 |
> |
|
52 |
> |
The bare minimum that a host should send is the following: - |
53 |
> |
|
54 |
> |
<packet> |
55 |
> |
</packet> |
56 |
> |
|
57 |
> |
Note that every XML tag must also have a matching closing |
58 |
> |
tag. |
59 |
> |
|
60 |
> |
However, such a packet is rather useless when it is |
61 |
> |
received by the server - it does not provide any useful |
62 |
> |
information. As such, a packet will be rejected by the |
63 |
> |
server if it does not specify the machine_name, its |
64 |
> |
I.P. address (ip), a packet sequence number (seq_no) |
65 |
> |
and a date. Note that the date is a long integer |
66 |
> |
representing the number of seconds since the epoch. |
67 |
> |
All of these are expected to be specified as an attribute |
68 |
> |
of the packet tag. If they are not specified here, then |
69 |
> |
the packet will be rejected. |
70 |
> |
|
71 |
> |
Thus, to ensure that a packet has a chance of being |
72 |
> |
acted upon, a host must specify at least four attribute |
73 |
> |
values - machine_name, ip, date and seq_no. These must |
74 |
> |
be formed in the style shown below. |
75 |
> |
|
76 |
> |
<packet machine_name="raptor" ip="aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd" |
77 |
> |
date="93456245245" seq_no="1234567"> |
78 |
> |
</packet> |
79 |
> |
|
80 |
> |
Note that the server may run additional 'plugin' tools |
81 |
> |
that are designed to filter/reject packets under certain |
82 |
> |
conditions. Please check with the server administrator |
83 |
> |
if you wish to know about the specific configuration of |
84 |
> |
your central monitoring system. |
85 |
> |
|
86 |
> |
The I.P. address and machine_name could be found from |
87 |
> |
the UDP packet itself, but these remain essential so |
88 |
> |
as to provide resiliance from stray packets that do not |
89 |
> |
contain any valid or useful data. |
90 |
> |
|
91 |
> |
Remember that malformed XML data would be rejected by the |
92 |
> |
central monitoring system immediately, without acting upon |
93 |
> |
it. |
94 |
> |
|
95 |
> |
|
96 |
> |
Classification of XML data in our system |
97 |
> |
---------------------------------------- |
98 |
> |
|
99 |
> |
|
100 |
> |
ESSENTIAL: - |
101 |
> |
|
102 |
> |
The following values are ESSENTIAL in each packet. Any |
103 |
> |
packet without these will be rejected. They MUST be |
104 |
> |
specified as attributes of the root node ("packet"): - |
105 |
> |
|
106 |
> |
ip |
107 |
> |
seq_no |
108 |
> |
date |
109 |
> |
machine_name |
110 |
> |
|
111 |
> |
|
112 |
> |
EXPECTED: - |
113 |
> |
|
114 |
> |
The following values are EXPECTED in each packet. All |
115 |
> |
packets are RECOMMENDED to specify these values, as the |
116 |
> |
server is designed to permanently store such data in an |
117 |
> |
easy and quick to access manner. It is not essential to |
118 |
> |
specify such values, but it does limit the usefulness of |
119 |
> |
the central monitoring system if these values are not |
120 |
> |
specified: - |
121 |
> |
|
122 |
> |
mac_address (attribute) |
123 |
> |
os_name (attribute) |
124 |
> |
os_version (attribute) |
125 |
> |
cpus * |
126 |
> |
load * |
127 |
> |
memory * |
128 |
> |
swap * |
129 |
> |
disk * |
130 |
> |
users (attribute) |
131 |
> |
|
132 |
> |
* - These parameters are specified with tags of the same |
133 |
> |
name. They contain nested XML tags. See later in |
134 |
> |
this document for more details about that! |
135 |
> |
|
136 |
> |
All of the values marked as being attributes above must be |
137 |
> |
specified as an attribute of the root tag ("packet") |
138 |
> |
|
139 |
> |
|
140 |
> |
OTHER: - |
141 |
> |
|
142 |
> |
Any other arbitrary values may be specified by the host. |
143 |
> |
The only provision here is that they may not share the |
144 |
> |
same name as another tag or attribute within the same |
145 |
> |
heirarchical level. The server will be able to handle |
146 |
> |
such clashes, however, it cannot be guaranteed which |
147 |
> |
of the duplicate parameters would gain priority. |
148 |
> |
|
149 |
> |
|
150 |
> |
Detail of a complete 'expected' XML packet via UDP |
151 |
> |
-------------------------------------------------- |
152 |
> |
|
153 |
> |
I shall start by showing an example of a complete |
154 |
> |
'expected' packet. I shall then explain the contents |
155 |
> |
of it. |
156 |
> |
|
157 |
> |
Here is an example of an XML packet, containing all of |
158 |
> |
the 'essential' and 'expected' data: - |
159 |
> |
|
160 |
> |
<packet ip="" seq_no="" date="" machine_name="" |
161 |
> |
mac_address="" os_name="" os_version="" |
162 |
> |
user=""> |
163 |
> |
<cpus> |
164 |
> |
<cpu0></cpu0> |
165 |
> |
<cpu1></cpu1> |
166 |
> |
<cpu2></cpu2> |
167 |
> |
</cpus> |
168 |
> |
<load> |
169 |
> |
<load1><load1> |
170 |
> |
<load5><load5> |
171 |
> |
<load15><load15> |
172 |
> |
</load> |
173 |
> |
<memory> |
174 |
> |
<free></free> |
175 |
> |
<total></total> |
176 |
> |
</memory> |
177 |
> |
<swap> |
178 |
> |
<free></free> |
179 |
> |
<total></total> |
180 |
> |
</swap> |
181 |
> |
<disk> |
182 |
> |
<p0> |
183 |
> |
<free></free> |
184 |
> |
<total></total> |
185 |
> |
<mounted></mounted> |
186 |
> |
<label></label> |
187 |
> |
</p0> |
188 |
> |
<p1> |
189 |
> |
<free></free> |
190 |
> |
<total></total> |
191 |
> |
<mount></mount> |
192 |
> |
<label></label> |
193 |
> |
</p1> |
194 |
> |
</disk> |
195 |
> |
</packet> |
196 |
> |
|
197 |
> |
Note that linefeeds and spaces would normally not be present. |
198 |
> |
These are only shown above for structure clarity. |
199 |
> |
|
200 |
> |
Note that all of the essential attributes have been specified |
201 |
> |
as attributes of the root node. The expected attribute |
202 |
> |
values are also attributes of the root node. |
203 |
> |
|
204 |
> |
The <cpus> tag begins a list of cpu load information. |
205 |
> |
Each subtag herein must be of the form cpux, where x is |
206 |
> |
the number of the processor in multiprocessor systems. |
207 |
> |
Note that this numbering starts from zero. |
208 |
> |
|
209 |
> |
The <load> tag begins a list of system load information. |
210 |
> |
The load tag is only expected to contain 3 subtags, named |
211 |
> |
"load1", "load5" and "load15". These represent the average |
212 |
> |
load 1 minute ago, 5 minutes ago and 15 minutes ago |
213 |
> |
respectively. |
214 |
> |
|
215 |
> |
The <memory> tag begins a list of system memory information. |
216 |
> |
This tag is only expected to contain two subtags, as shown |
217 |
> |
in the example above. These two subtags specify how much |
218 |
> |
memory the system has free and how much memory the system |
219 |
> |
has in total. |
220 |
> |
|
221 |
> |
The <swap> tag is identical in nature to the <memory> tag. |
222 |
> |
|
223 |
> |
The <disk> tag begins a list of partition information. |
224 |
> |
Each subtag must be of the form px, where x is the number |
225 |
> |
of the disk partition that is unique for that particular |
226 |
> |
system. Note that the numbering of px is expected to |
227 |
> |
start from zero. Each <px> tag contains the following |
228 |
> |
subtags: - |
229 |
> |
<free> - the free partition space in bytes. |
230 |
> |
<total> - the total partition size in bytes. |
231 |
> |
<mount> - the mount point, eg, "/var". |
232 |
> |
<label> - the label of the physical disk. |
233 |
> |
|
234 |
> |
The <disk_total> tag begins a list of total disk space, |
235 |
> |
similar in implementation to the <disk_free> tag. |
236 |
> |
|
237 |
> |
Any other values and attributes may be specified in the |
238 |
> |
packet, providing they are not specified in the same |
239 |
> |
heirarchical level as another attribute or value with |
240 |
> |
the same name. |
241 |
> |
|
242 |
> |
|
243 |
> |
Flexibility and Minimising bandwidth |
244 |
> |
------------------------------------ |
245 |
> |
|
246 |
> |
The following issues still stand: - |
247 |
> |
|
248 |
> |
The means of submitting host data via UDP containing XML |
249 |
> |
markup is provided so that future customisation is easily |
250 |
> |
possible. It would be possible to easily tailor a custom |
251 |
> |
piece of host monitoring software to provide exactly what |
252 |
> |
data is desired for adequate monitoring. |
253 |
> |
|
254 |
> |
Some of the XML markup demonstrated above contains a lot |
255 |
> |
of rendundant features. For example, it is not necessary |
256 |
> |
to lay the contents out neatly (although this certainly |
257 |
> |
helps visualise the contents). |
258 |
> |
|
259 |
> |
The amount of data sent within each UDP packet may be (in |
260 |
> |
some cases, vastly) reduced by using some of the ideas |
261 |
> |
described below: - |
262 |
> |
|
263 |
> |
- Remove unnecessary linefeeds and 'white space' |
264 |
> |
|
265 |
> |
- If a single piece of data is to be represented, it |
266 |
> |
will usually occupy less space if it is stored as |
267 |
> |
an attribute to a tag, rather than within a pair |
268 |
> |
of tags. |
269 |
> |
|
270 |
> |
- Comments within the XML may be useful for testing |
271 |
> |
purposes, however, the server ignores all comments |
272 |
> |
so these can be removed to reduce packet sizes. |
273 |
> |
|
274 |
> |
Taking the above into account, here is an example of some |
275 |
> |
ideally formed XML to be contained within a UDP packet: - |
276 |
> |
|
277 |
> |
<packet machine_name="raptor" ip="aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd" |
278 |
> |
><freespace><drive1>23677</drive1><drive2>23534</d |
279 |
> |
rive2><drive3>10390</drive3></freespace></packet> |
280 |
> |
|
281 |
> |
Notice how all unnecessary 'white space' and linefeeds have |
282 |
> |
been removed. The comment has also been removed. Values |
283 |
> |
such as "machine_name" and "ip" have both been stored as an |
284 |
> |
attribute of the root node ("packet") as this results in |
285 |
> |
a smaller packet size. |
286 |
> |
|
287 |
> |
|
288 |
> |
About |
289 |
> |
----- |
290 |
> |
|
291 |
> |
This document was written by Paul Mutton [pjm2@ukc.ac.uk] |
292 |
> |
for use by the team working on a 3rd year Computer Science |
293 |
> |
project called "i-scream". More details can be found on the |
294 |
> |
project website - http://www.i-scream.org.uk |
295 |
> |
|
296 |
> |
|